Countryside strategy management areas - West Leeds

The waterways, woodlands and areas of green space provide opportunities for nature conservation
The waterways, woodlands and areas of green space provide opportunities for nature conservation

The Management Area of West Leeds is characterised by two main areas. The first is a belt of urban fringe countryside to the west of the district which divides Leeds and Bradford. The second is the Kirkstall Valley and Hawksworth Wood which form encapsulated areas of countryside and important green corridors.

Stretching from Calverley to Cockersdale is an area of urban fringe countryside of both arable and pastoral farmland containing the Aire and Calverley Valleys. Situated between Leeds and Bradford these areas perform a critical Green Belt function in preventing the coalescence of the two cities. The area provides an important recreational resource for the communities of Farsley, Pudsey, Farnley and Wortley. To the south-east of Pudsey better quality agricultural land is used for intensive market gardening. Urban fringe pressures within the area are evident through the encroachment of urban activities and the degradation of land through vandalism, fly tipping, horse grazing and the gradual deterioration of farmland features such as field boundaries.

Kirkstall Valley represents an urban green corridor of strategic significance within the district. Extending from the Inner City at Armley to Bramley Fall through to the river valley beyond Calverley Bridge, the valley contains a series of landscape features and individual attractions. Through this setting pass the River Aire, Leeds and Liverpool Canal and Leeds-Carlisle railway line. Areas of industrial activity and more recent redevelopment schemes contrast with more open areas of the valley floor which contain a mixture of playing fields, nursery gardens, parkland, woodlands and derelict land. Key attractions within the valley include Armley Mills Museum, Armley Park, Gotts Park, Kirkstall Abbey, the Abbey House Museum, Hawksworth Woods and Bramley Fall.

In addition, the canal towpath and network of footpaths provide opportunities for informal recreation. The waterways, woodlands and areas of green space provide opportunities for nature conservation (such as the Kirkstall Valley Nature Reserve). Given these characteristics, the Kirkstall Valley and the Aire Valley as a whole are clearly key resources which need to be enhanced in the context of the Countryside Strategy. The Kirkstall Valley is subject to a number of pressures including development proposals, recreation activity and fly tipping. One section falls within the Urban Development Area for which a planning framework has been prepared.

Area Initiatives
Within West Leeds several key initiatives have influenced and continue to influence the character of the countryside. The Kirkstall Valley Park Plan and the Kirkstall Valley Planning Framework and Ranger service have set a context for countryside management within the Valley. The Kirkstall Valley Park Plan and Kirkstall Valley Planning Framework have been subsumed within the Leeds UDP. In addressing urban fringe issues between Leeds and Bradford, the Tong/Calverley Countryside Project has been an important management tool for over 20 years. The project represents a joint initiative between Leeds City Council, Bradford Metropolitan Council, the Countryside Commission and local community groups. The focus of the initiative has been to tackle landscape, recreation, nature conservation and agricultural issues within the project area, especially where conflicts occur between these uses. Within West Leeds also the City Council is active in promoting the Parish Paths Partnership Initiative at Pudsey.

Management Strategy
Given the nature of countryside issues within West Leeds there is a need to direct a countryside management strategy to focus upon landscape, urban fringe and green corridor concerns.

Landscape

  • Safeguard the landscape character of the area through measures to Conserve/Restore, Restore, Conserve/Enhance the existing character in appropriate locations.

Recreation and Nature Conservation

  • In partnership with local communities, seek to maintain and promote initiatives to protect and enhance the green corridor functions of the Kirkstall Valley in relation to access, Nature Conservation and amenity.

Urban Fringe

  • Support and develop Countryside Management initiatives to reconcile urban fringe problems in securing positive opportunities.
  • Secure opportunities to improve access to the countryside where the Public Rights of Way network is poorly established.
     

 


languages
Arabic Bengali Chinese Farsi Gujarati Hindi Kurdish Punjabi Urdu